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Social Networking and Opportunities in the Public Sector

 

First published: August 2007                    

                                                          

                                                     

                                                 

                        

Social Networking tools have proliferated in the recent past, and many individuals are now utilising such tools as a core part of their day-to-day lives. If these tools can be harnessed as a means of interaction by the public sector, constituency involvement will rise, while costs can be minimised.

Key Findings

  Social Networking can be utilised to approach the public
From a position as a pure consumer-led phenomenon, we can now look to social networking tools as being capable of playing a part within a controlled, public sector/citizen communication and collaboration environment

 Social Networking is not new
After being talked about for years, usability, standardisation and availability have all improved. Proprietary interfaces are breaking down, and back end standards are enabling consumer tools to interoperate with more commercial systems

  Existing collaborative tools have a place to play alongside social networking
Email, instant messaging, and texting are all regarded as mainstream tools, with different socio-demographic groups making greater use of some tools than others. There is a strong need to make public sector social networking approaches inclusive of both existing and emerging communication and collaboration tools

  Many Social Networking tools are difficult to control
"Immersive" sites, mass publication sites and many other social networking concepts are not suited to being controlled as easily as a directly hosted public sector department's existing web site. Processes and controls need to be in place for content issued via such sites

 Consumer-focused tools have limitations
Consumer tools do not have the enterprise capabilities required for full usage within the public sector. However, capabilities such as recording, filtering and audit capabilities can be gained through the use of enterprise back ends that can accept consumer clients at the front end. Also, such back end solutions can provide scalability, integration capabilities, security and flexibility that would be missing from a pure-play consumer tooling approach
 
  Many tools may have short lifetimes, and successful technologies will have to survive through multiple versions
Social Networking is a highly dynamic environment and as such, many tools may not survive in the medium to long term. For example, blogs in a pure sense are not a suitable mainstream tool for public sector usage due to their lack of content control, but may have to be regarded in a "hybrid" fashion of a mediated and reviewed outbound information feed until different solutions come through. Successful tools will have to co-exist with previous versions - choice of a fully supported system will be key

 

  Emerging tools are far more functional
Tooling aimed at larger organisations tends to have the capabilities that the public sector is looking for. Increasingly such tools also provide a highly integrated approach to social networking, with policies as to which tool should be used when being a strong point. Here, the use of social networking solutions becomes part of the overall process, rather than something that is regarded as being an exception to it, and as such can be easily audited and reported as necessary.

 
CONCLUSIONS:
The communications landscape has never been more complex nor offered so many choices and solutions.  Businesses are looking to their suppliers to steer a safe way through the confusing array of options, and absorb some of the risk and uncertainty for them, while providing innovative new services and helping to keep a lid on escalating costs.

Quocirca is a leading primary research and analysis company with native language research capabilities across the whole of Europe, along with North America and the Asia Pacific region.
Full report available free of charge, click here [Registration required]
 

 
 
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